Argentina
Argentina
Amongst the several cases reported in this volume of an elite rocked by a crisis, looking to poor groups for support and thereby shifting policy in a pro-poor direction, Argentina is one of the most dramatic. The crisis arose from the collapse of an exchange rate peg under the stress of fiscal and institutional weaknesses which the IMF had indulged rather than being able to correct. In the consequent economic crisis many middle-class as well as working class people lost their jobs and their livelihoods, and thereby became radicalized, operating as piqueteros, or radical protesters, demanding that government policy alter its stance and in particular reject the neoliberal 'Washington consensus'. Under the Duhalde and the two Kirchner administrations after 2002, this move away from a neoliberal and towards an activist state gradually occurred, involving both the cooptation of the piqueteros into government and the adoption of a heterodox policy framework, known in Argentina as neodesarrollismo (neodevelopmentalism)., a mixture of 1950s-style import-substituting industrialization with newstyle fiscal austerity and innovative new policy instruments, such as export taxes linked to social protection expenditures. The Mesa de Dialogo, a new discussion forum established to conciliate the differences of interest groups affected by the crisis, was also important in facilitating the transition to the new policy regime.These new instruments have helped to give teeth to the left-of-centre strategies which have gained ground inside and outside Latin America in recent years.
Argentina, IMF, Neodevelopmentalism, Protest movements
Grugel, Jean
c8393bff-0a98-4850-bebb-8a9a521926da
Riggirozzi, Pia
ed3be4f8-37e7-46a2-8242-f6495d727c22
24 May 2012
Grugel, Jean
c8393bff-0a98-4850-bebb-8a9a521926da
Riggirozzi, Pia
ed3be4f8-37e7-46a2-8242-f6495d727c22
Grugel, Jean and Riggirozzi, Pia
(2012)
Argentina.
In,
Mosley, Paul, Chiripanhura, Blessing, Grugel, Jean and Thirkell-White, Ben
(eds.)
The Politics of Poverty Reduction.
Oxford University Press.
(doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199692125.003.0009).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
Amongst the several cases reported in this volume of an elite rocked by a crisis, looking to poor groups for support and thereby shifting policy in a pro-poor direction, Argentina is one of the most dramatic. The crisis arose from the collapse of an exchange rate peg under the stress of fiscal and institutional weaknesses which the IMF had indulged rather than being able to correct. In the consequent economic crisis many middle-class as well as working class people lost their jobs and their livelihoods, and thereby became radicalized, operating as piqueteros, or radical protesters, demanding that government policy alter its stance and in particular reject the neoliberal 'Washington consensus'. Under the Duhalde and the two Kirchner administrations after 2002, this move away from a neoliberal and towards an activist state gradually occurred, involving both the cooptation of the piqueteros into government and the adoption of a heterodox policy framework, known in Argentina as neodesarrollismo (neodevelopmentalism)., a mixture of 1950s-style import-substituting industrialization with newstyle fiscal austerity and innovative new policy instruments, such as export taxes linked to social protection expenditures. The Mesa de Dialogo, a new discussion forum established to conciliate the differences of interest groups affected by the crisis, was also important in facilitating the transition to the new policy regime.These new instruments have helped to give teeth to the left-of-centre strategies which have gained ground inside and outside Latin America in recent years.
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Published date: 24 May 2012
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
© Paul Mosley 2012. All rights reserved.
Copyright:
Copyright 2014 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords:
Argentina, IMF, Neodevelopmentalism, Protest movements
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Local EPrints ID: 453874
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453874
PURE UUID: 250c9466-290c-49b3-a5a9-7f44679a447b
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Date deposited: 25 Jan 2022 17:42
Last modified: 13 Sep 2024 01:43
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Contributors
Author:
Jean Grugel
Editor:
Paul Mosley
Editor:
Blessing Chiripanhura
Editor:
Jean Grugel
Editor:
Ben Thirkell-White
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